The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee on Monday is naming 19 members to the Frontline Program for its most vulnerable incumbents in 2018.

The initial Frontline roster, obtained first by Roll Call, is about half freshman members. Eight members won in districts President Donald Trump carried last fall. And all of them, save for one, are National Republican Congressional Committee initial targets.

New Jersey congressional candidate Alex Law had a plan, just not a viable one. (JM Rieger/CQ Roll Call file photo)

Alex Law came to our candidate interview with three interns, and I think one of them was wearing shorts.

Some of my colleagues chastised me for scheduling a meeting with a 24-year-old kid challenging Rep. Donald Norcross in a Democratic primary in New Jersey’s 1st District, considering Norcross comes from one of the Mid-Atlantic’s most powerful political families.

House Majority PAC and CHC Bold PAC are tying a California Republican to the presumptive GOP nominee, Donald Trump. (Screenshot of ad).

Two House Democratic groups are stepping into a California race just weeks before the June 7 top-two primary to make the case that the Republican, an immigrant from Lebanon, is no different from Donald Trump.

House Majority PAC, an outside group that supports Democrats running for the House, and CHC Bold PAC, the "voice for Latinos in American politics," are going up with a $300,000 media campaign Tuesday in support of Democrat Salud Carbajal and against Republican Katcho Achadjian in the 24th District.

If Republican Barbara Comstock ever wonders what attacks are coming her way later this year, the Virginia congresswoman can read the entire 535-page opposition research book on her life, which Democrats posted online.

Strategists at the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee did not publish the document by accident. It’s just one example of how both parties publicly share information in order to avoid illegal coordination with outside groups and running afoul of campaign finance laws.

Millennials have a reputation for being lazy, but a bipartisan crop of young congressional candidates is raising hundreds of thousands of dollars, which they’ll need, considering they are taking on the political establishment.

Considering the average age of a House member is 57, both parties could use some fresher faces to promote to voters.